xviii Preface: Empirical Corporate Finance
unchecked, this incentive may lead to value-reducing overinvestment in risk-reducing
technologies and projects. However, as reviewed by Clifford Smith in Chapter 18,
“Managing corporate risk”, it is widely accepted that active cash flow risk management
can also lead to increased shareholder value. For example, if hedging alters the timing
of taxable cash flows, there may be a net tax benefit. Hedging may also reduce expected
costs of financial distress which in turn may allow the firm to capture additional benefits
from leverage. Hedging opportunities (using various forms of derivatives and hybrid
instruments) have increased substantially over the past decade, and their costs have
decreased. As a result, today some form of hedging activity is common among large
publicly traded firms. The evidence indicates that smaller firms—with greater default
risk—tend to hedge a larger percentage of their exposures than larger firms. However,
Smith points to several data problems that limit the power of the empirical research in
this area.
I would like to thank all the contributors for their hard work and patience in seeing
this Handbook to fruition. A special thank goes to the Series Editor William T. Ziemba
for his enthusiasm for this project.
B. Espen Eckbo
Dartmouth College, 2007